What makes Nicotine Addictive?
In 1988 the U.S. Surgeon General concluded that nicotine in tobacco is addictive.
The three major findings were:
- Cigarette smoking and other forms of tobacco
use are addictive
- Nicotine is the drug in tobacco that causes addiction
- Nicotine addiction
is similar to heroin or cocaine addiction.
How nicotine works
- Nicotine causes chemical or biological changes in the brain.
This effect is called psychoactive and although it is less dramatic than
heroin or cocaine, the strength of the addiction is just as powerful. It
is a 'reinforcing' drug, which means that users desire the drug regardless
of the damaging effects. For example, in research conducted in 1994, only
50% of smokers who suffered a heart attack managed to quit smoking even though
their doctors advised them to. Coincidentally, 50% of all regular smokers
die as a result of smoking.
- Nicotine addiction is a physical dependency. Withdrawal
symptoms are severe and most smokers cannot quit on their first attempt because
of these symptoms.
- The human body builds a tolerance to nicotine and the effect
of the drug is reduced over time. As a result, regular smokers can inhale
greater amounts of smoke and therefore greater amounts of toxins, without
showing immediate effects (ie coughing, nausea).
- Nicotine is extremely poisonous
if consumed in large amounts and most people feel sick and dizzy the first
time they smoke. These negative affects are quickly overcome. Over time the
body builds a tolerance to nicotine, resulting in an increase in the amount
of cigarettes smoked.
Nicotine in the body
- Cigarette smoke is acidic and therefore nicotine is absorbed
through the lungs. Pipe and cigar smoke is alkaline and the nicotine is absorbed
through the mouth. Human lungs are very efficient in absorbing nicotine which
then moves through the bloodstream and into the brain and other organs of the
body.
- It takes only 10 seconds for nicotine to reach the brain after being inhaled.
This causes several physiological reactions day.
- Acute increase in heart rate and blood pressure
- Constriction of blood vessels causing a temperature drop in the hands
and feet
- Brain waves are altered and muscles relax.
Levels of dependency
- Levels of dependency vary, but 89% of smokers have a cigarette
every one to two hours throughout the day.
- A highly addicted smoker smokes more than 25 cigarettes a day, ranks the
first cigarette in the day as the most important, and will smoke within 30
minutes of waking up.
Withdrawal symptoms
Without the use of hypnosis the most severe withdrawal symptoms occur within
the first few days. The desire to smoke tends to be especially strong when
a person is under stress. The typical withdrawal symptoms are:
- headaches
- anxiety and irritability
- difficulty concentrating and sleeping
- hunger
- decreased heart rate and blood pressure
- craving for nicotine
Other side-effects, such as tiredness and coughing, are indications that
the body is in a state of repair and is cleaning out the poisons associated
with smoking.
According to the U.S. Lung Health Study, weight gain for men averaged
4.9 kg and 5.2 kg. for women in the first year after quitting.
Most of these
unpleasant symptoms can be completely avoided using hydrotherapy
Quitting smoking
- There are now more former smokers (26%), over the age of 15, than current
smokers (25%).
- The most common reason given for quitting smoking is concern
about future personal health. Other reasons for quitting were life-style
changes, cost of cigarettes, having a baby, and smoke-related illness or
death of a friend or family member.
- The most common reason current smokers
give for not quitting is lack of will-power.
There are five successive stages to quitting smoking:
- Pre-contemplation -- not thinking about quitting
- Contemplation -- thinking
about quitting but not yet ready
- Preparation -- getting ready to quit
- Action -- quitting
- Maintenance -- remaining a non-smoker.
Further Reading
You may also be interested in the following resources:
- The Stop Smoking Video
- Smoking Related Websites
- Testimonials From Ex-Smokers
- 599 Chemical Additives in Tobacco
- Brainwave Entrainment
- What's really in a cigarette?
- Smoking Ban reduces cadmium
- Studies comparing Hypnosis with or NRT
- What is NLP?
- Phobias
- Denial
- If You Could Spend a Day With Me...
- The benefits of stopping smoking?
- What makes nicotine addictive?
- Nicotine and more...
- Smoking: The Facts
- What makes Nicotine Addictive?